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I have a 88 B2200 and i did a 318 V8 swap. Wasnt hard. Added coils to front. Welded in the mounts and changed nothing else. Fast but managable.
5 quarts if you have a 305 or 350 engine. 6 quarts if you have a newer style 4.8 liter, 5.3 liter, or 6.0 liter v8 engine.
You can put another Mazda truck engine in place of the original.Now it does not matter if it is out of a automatic or manual transmission truck.The 1986-1993 are interchangeable.The things that do matter is if the truck is has a b2200 or b2600 it has a different ecm (electronic control module) the computer which is made specifically to run with those engines due to sensor and if it is carburetor and or fuel injected.So if you want to upgrade the engine to the b2200 the engine harness going to the ecm may be different but NOT sure (myself) on this .However if you do go with the newer engine it will require the ecm for a b2200 truck .I suggest checking with a local Mazda dealer to see if the harness is compatible it probably is but checking is a good idea.There is not much difference in the b2000 to b2200 in terms of basics the only real difference is cubic inches the 2000 is 1998 cu and the 2200 is 2184 cu.Unless someone else has knowledge other wise this is my suggestion.Hope this helps and if I left something off or incorrect may others correct my post.
85 and some 86
You can only swap an engine of a Civic Hatchback with an engine of a newer car. Its only legal to swap in engines of the same or newer OBD series. So the Civic engine you swap with has to be a 94 or newer but any of those engines will fit.
only 96 and newer have OBD ports
Yea, it does almost all domestic vehicles 1980s and newer have a computer in them
Most import 6 lug patterns will fit, this includes Mitsubishi, Isuzu, Toyota, etc... It is very common to find rims from a Pathfinder on a B2000 or B2200. Some GMC rims are also common. Toyota has a lot of pickup trucks including much newer models that have some beautiful rims that bolt right on. Kyrasis6 Owner of Mazdatruckin.com
There is no difference in a 1995 dodge dakota with a 3.9 v6 engine and a 2000 dodge dakota with a 3.9 v6 engine and you can exchange the newer engine with the older one.
Most of the newer ones
An automatic transmission to bolt up to the original 1959 6 banger would have to come from a 1962 or older chevy/GMC 6 pickup or passenger car. 1963 and newer is completely different.
On newer cars it is a copy on the top of the engine marked "OIL".